
| Band: | Eminence |
| Album: | The God Of All Mistakes |
| Record Label: | Locomotive Records |
| Writer: | XTRMDave |
| MySpace: | http://www.myspace.com/eminenceband |
| Buy: | Click Here To Buy It Now |
The band plays some kind of modern Thrash/Death Metal, After hearing Eminence's Latest effort over and over again, I'm left questioning what this album really is: some grand climax of Slipknot-laden gold, or a nu-death Shit? Even if they're not so famous yet I'm sure that all the people who like bands like Machine Head or even the last albums of Sepultura should find something for them in this release. Eminence is not a band which has created something really new but they're good at playing their music.
If you like Power Thrash, and like to listen to Machine Head or Lamb Of God I think that "The God Of All Mistakes" will not be a disappointing album for you. Of course Eminence is not the first band which plays such kind of music but they do it well and their new album is full of catchy songs. It seemed the splicing of both radio-friendly and extreme sounds within the metal field was essentially a brief phase several squads thought would score big bucks, but the ever-irritating trend has grown beyond words or labels.
Although creative extremism is invited, a Soulfly-like concept carefully blocks all transportation options for that ideology, just so the absolute perk will never reach Eminence's frontier; however, its plan is bigger than they could ever predict. After kicking originality where it hurts, this modern allele slowly morphs the full-length into a chamber of groove riffs stuck with minimal substance, rapping vocals, occasional breakdowns, no soloing, bass-snare percussion, and more tedious actions accommodating nu-metal's asshole. Of course, there shouldn't be any questioning about the direction's result, because if one has experienced metal to even a slight degree, one will completely understand why. Doing so was just bad news, inside and out.
With "The God Of All Mistakes", it is not a musical revolution. Their sound is classic but well done so if you're into violent modern bands don't forget to have a look on "The God Of All Mistakes". This album is more than correct and well interpreted, it will not become legendary but you can be sure that you'll pass a good moment while you'll listen to it. When it comes to the nu-death thing, I can wholeheartedly label The God of All Mistakes one of its finest offerings, yet that still does not shine light on Eminence's unnecessary nosedive into Metal stupidity. definitely expect a lackluster approach that will not bring much joy overall.
If you like Power Thrash, and like to listen to Machine Head or Lamb Of God I think that "The God Of All Mistakes" will not be a disappointing album for you. Of course Eminence is not the first band which plays such kind of music but they do it well and their new album is full of catchy songs. It seemed the splicing of both radio-friendly and extreme sounds within the metal field was essentially a brief phase several squads thought would score big bucks, but the ever-irritating trend has grown beyond words or labels.
Although creative extremism is invited, a Soulfly-like concept carefully blocks all transportation options for that ideology, just so the absolute perk will never reach Eminence's frontier; however, its plan is bigger than they could ever predict. After kicking originality where it hurts, this modern allele slowly morphs the full-length into a chamber of groove riffs stuck with minimal substance, rapping vocals, occasional breakdowns, no soloing, bass-snare percussion, and more tedious actions accommodating nu-metal's asshole. Of course, there shouldn't be any questioning about the direction's result, because if one has experienced metal to even a slight degree, one will completely understand why. Doing so was just bad news, inside and out.
With "The God Of All Mistakes", it is not a musical revolution. Their sound is classic but well done so if you're into violent modern bands don't forget to have a look on "The God Of All Mistakes". This album is more than correct and well interpreted, it will not become legendary but you can be sure that you'll pass a good moment while you'll listen to it. When it comes to the nu-death thing, I can wholeheartedly label The God of All Mistakes one of its finest offerings, yet that still does not shine light on Eminence's unnecessary nosedive into Metal stupidity. definitely expect a lackluster approach that will not bring much joy overall.
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